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Indonesia increases harvest quota
March 19, 2007

Indonesia’s Minister of Forestry announced that the harvest quota for natural timber for 2007 would be increased to 9.1 million m3, up almost 12% from 2006. However, sources close to the Ministry of Forestry indicated that the quota for 2007 could be revised up to 12.4 million m3. The harvest quota was reduced between 2001 and 2005 to achieve sustained yield and reduce over-capacity in lumber and plywood mills, which, the government believes, has been achieved to a certain extent.

The Indonesian wood industry has shrunk in the last years with the declining availability of logs. The number and production capacity of lumber and plywood mills have plummeted over the period. The declining supply of Indonesian plywood contributed, in fact, to the sharp increase of plywood prices in 2006. According to some analysts, the logging quota in 2006 (8.13 million m3) was not fully used by local mills due to the reduced production capacity and financial difficulties. Some analysts thus believe that the logging quota for 2007 would not necessarily lead to the revival of the Indonesian wood industry.

(ITTO's Tropical Timber Market Report)

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